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The German edition of Wikipedia was the first non-English Wikipedia subdomain, and was originally named deutsche.wikipedia.com. Its creation was announced by Jimmy Wales on 16 March 2001. [2] One of the earliest snapshots of the home page, dated 21 March 2001 (revision #9), can be seen at the Wayback Machine site. [4]
The Deutsches Museum (German Museum, officially Deutsches Museum von Meisterwerken der Naturwissenschaft und Technik (English: German Museum of Masterpieces of Science and Technology)) in Munich, Germany, is the world's largest museum of science and technology, with about 125,000 exhibited objects from 50 fields of science and technology. [1]
The archive was founded in West Berlin on 1 January 1970, during the division of Germany as a department of Frankfurt am Main based Deutsche Bibliothek—the national library for West Germany. It incorporated its precursor, the Deutsche Musik-Phonothek (1961–1969), and was located (until 2010) at the Siemens-Villa in Berlin-Lankwitz. [4]
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Deutsch (/ d ɔɪ tʃ / DOYTCH, German: ⓘ) or Deutsche (/ ˈ d ɔɪ tʃ ə / DOY-chə, German: [ˈdɔʏtʃə] ⓘ) may refer to: Deutsch or (das) Deutsche : the German language or in particular Standard German , spoken in central European countries and other places
On 1 April 1992, Deutsche Welle inherited the RIAS-TV broadcast facilities, using them to start a German- and English-language television channel broadcast via satellite, DW-TV, adding a short Spanish broadcast segment in November of the same year. In 1995 it began 24-hour operation (12 hours German, 10 hours English, 2 hours Spanish).
The song's music video was directed by Specter Berlin and was released on 28 March 2019 at 18:00 CET, [3] following a 35-second teaser trailer on 26 March. [4] The lengthy music video sparked controversy; its dark, violent, and macabre style—typical of the band's aesthetic—features various events from German history, [5] [6] including Roman times, the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, the ...
The Deutsches Fremdwörterbuch (DFWB) is a multiple-volume dictionary of foreign words loaned into the German language, covering words which are in current use in German on historical principles. History